21 Or. 430 | Or. | 1891
The sole question presented by this record is, whether a person who is neither a petitioner for a county road nor a remonstrator against its location, may prosecute a writ of review to question the jurisdiction or regularity of the proceedings of the county court.
Section 583, Hill’s Code, provides: “Any party to any process or proceeding before or by any inferior court, officer, or tribunal, may have the decision or determination thereof reviewed for errors therein, as in this title prescribed, and not otherwise.” It, therefore, becomes necessary to determine whether these plaintiffs were parties to the proceedings in the county court- establishing said county road in such sense that they may prosecute this writ.
Section 4062 requires all applications for laying out, altering, or locating county roads to be by petition to the county court of the proper county, signed by at least twelve householders of the county, residing in the vicinity where said road is to be laid out, altered, or located, which petition shall specify the place of beginning, the intermediate points, if any, and the place of termination of said road. Section 4063 in effect requires, when any such petition sba.11 be presented to the county court, it shall be accompanied by satisfactory proof that notice has been given by advertisement posted at the place of holding county court, and
This question was involved in C. & G. Road Co. v. Douglas County, 5 Or. 280, but not decided. Prim, J., wrote for affirmance on other grounds, with whom concurred, Shat-tuck, J. McArthur, J., wrote an opinion concurring specially but for the sole reason that the plaintiff did not sign either the petition or remonstrance, and was therefore not a party. Bonham, 0. J., dissented, but expressed no opinion, and Burnett, J., in a separate dissenting opinion maintained that the plaintiff had sufficient standing to sue out and prosecute the writ. The plaintiff’s property was attacked by the proceedings in the county court, and that of itself would give the plaintiff a right to the writ. Minard v. Douglas Co. 9 Or. 206, is a case where the writ of review was sustained by this court in favor of one who was neither a petitioner nor remonstrator. The opinion in that case states “that on the seventh day of April, 1880, the appellant, a land owner, a portion of whose land had been taken for the use of the road, presented his petition for a writ of review,” etc., thus clearly recognizing his right to the writ. Before considering some authorities from other states on this subject, a more particular reference to the statute itself may aid us somewhat in the inquiry. Section 4062, supra, requires notice to be given to all persons concerned. An individual through whose land a proposed road is about to be located, and which necessarily appropriates to public use the land taken, is a person concerned, within this statute; and the fact that he is a person entitled to notice, enables
In referring to a class of proceedings somewhat like these, among others, it is said in 2 Greenleaf’s Ev. § 525: “ These decisions are binding and conclusive not only upon the parties actually litigating the cause, but upon all others; partly upon the ground that, in most cases of this kind, and especially in questions upon property seized and proceeded against, every one who can possibly be affected by the decision, has a right to appear and assert his rights by becoming an actual party to the proceedings.”
The better view, and I think it is sustained by the weight of authority, is that a person who has an interest in the result of these proceedings, may have the benefit of the writ. By interest, is meant a direct pecuniary interest. In Colden v. Botts, 12 Wend. 234, it was held that a person who had not such interest could not have certiorari to reverse summary proceedings. In Richman v. Board of Supervisors, 70 Iowa, 627, a number of persons were allowed to join in prosecuting a writ of certiorari to quash certain proceedings authorizing the construction of a levee and assessing certain taxes on adjacent lands. In Ex Parte Keenan, 21 Ala. 558, in a proceeding by certiorari to annul the illegal location of a road across the lands of the petitioner, it was held that he prima facie shows injury when it is made to appear that the 'road has been illegally established over his land. And in Long Point Road, 5 Harr. 152, it was held that in case of a new road in regard to the persons returned as having an interest, it might operate unjustly to confine the parties to the findings of the return; and if a party not named in the return will make an affidavit and support it by competent evidence, that he is the owner or possessor of any part of the land through or along which the road runs, he will be entitled to a review.
Upon the argument here something was said by appellant’s counsel as to a diminution of the record in the county court in that there was no proof of service of notice on file in that court, but that is a question in which the other side is more directly interested. Notice must have been given and the fact must affirmatively appear from the record. To locate and establish a highway, every essential require-
The judgment appealed from must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court with directions to proceed with the case according to law and the practice of that court.